Baby face qualitative Evaluation
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ParentsAsTeachers BabyFACE QualEvaluationReport 1-15
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- Lack of trust According to eleven parent educators and seven supervisors across 11 sites
Family stress and crises
In over half the sites (10), staff (six parent educators and five supervisors) noted the challenges of recruiting and serving families who are struggling with a myriad of other issues. While it was difficult to get families who are struggling to enroll in the program, it was especially challenging to keep them engaged and continue regular home visits with families who were dealing with ongoing struggles of lack of housing, unemployment, substance abuse, and domestic violence. These ongoing daily struggles may have been part of what made offering basic needs incentives so helpful in keeping families engaged; knowing they would get diapers may have helped some families work more diligently to keep their home visit appointments. When you are in an underserved community, you have a lot of people who are crisis-oriented, and getting to a meeting is not their top priority. They were concentrating on their everyday lives of what to do to provide for their families, and that hindered their participation. Some are struggling with housing and some are running from the law. This is just one more thing to have to make happen in their day, and it is not a priority when they don’t have housing, don’t know where their meals are coming from. Baby FACE Wilder Research, January 2015 Qualitative Evaluation 11 I wish I could reduce crime, domestic violence, substance abuse, divorce. And I wish there was a better system of income coming into the house. Lack of trust According to eleven parent educators and seven supervisors across 11 sites, lack of trust was a challenge for recruitment and ongoing engagement. Some families were hesitant to have a stranger come into their home or talk about personal family issues. Parent educators were able to overcome some parents’ discomfort of having someone in their home by having “porch visits” (three sites specifically mentioned porch visits) or holding visits at other locations, e.g., a public place or the parent educator’s home. Parent educators also talk with parents in a way that doesn’t shame their past experiences or parental choices, in order to get them to open up. Trust took time to develop. [Families on our reservation] are so shy, and they don’t want people to be looking at their house inside - they feel their house is dirty, or maybe it is that their drywall is not up. But once you start going back, having porch visits, you build that relationship, tell them about the program, [and] invite them to the Family Circle, where we have fun activities and presentations, and a free meal. Having mothers trust the goals of the BIE is sometimes a challenge. Parents had distrust for someone coming in and offering something for free. Like it was too good to be true. The problem is that in Indian country, it takes a while for people to feel comfortable with you. A lot were not really open to sharing their lives and stuff like that. Download 0.6 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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